It's continually fascinating to take a look into those little chits that extraordinary pioneers frequently convey while making talks. Not just does it give a feeling of the pioneer's ideas, the 'trick sheet' likewise offers a frequently bare thought of the pioneer's perspective.
Today, on account of a splendid picture taker of the Kolkata-based 'The Telegraph' daily paper, we got a harsh thought with reference to how https://issuu.com/jntuworlda Congress Vice President Rahul Gandhi considers. The photo catches a fix of a bit of paper that Rahul conveyed into the Parliament before his discourse. That discourse was the one Rahul made in the midst of the open deliberation on the Lalit Modi furore in the Lok Sabha on Wednesday.
This is what we found from the paper. Rahul may make his discourse in Hindi, however he composes his Hindi discourse in English. The principal argument on the paper was, "Log PM Modi ko sunna chahte hai, woh unki rai janna chahte hai, Modigate standard, Vyapam standard." (People need to get notification from PM Modi, about Modigate, about Vyapam).
Possibly Rahul needed to say 'Lalitgate'? We aren't exactly certain. Second, he takes a page from Modi's own word reference. Another https://vimeo.com/jntuworldall point peruses, 'Logon ko Modi ji ki jagah Maun Modi dikh raha hai' (People see a quiet Modi when they take a gander at Modi ji). Yes, Rahul makes a word play. Amid his race crusade discourses in 2014, PM Modi had frequently said that then-PM was not "Manmohan" but rather 'Maunmohan'. Third, the 'three monkeys of Gandhiji' discovers notice in Rahul's ideas.
Presently, this is intriguing. On his page, Rahul has jotted the words 'Bura mat dekho', 'bura mat suno', 'bura mat socho' (the three diamonds that Gandhiji gave the Indians). We would have wanted to see what else Rahul had written on his 'trick sheet', yet the photo was not sufficiently clear. Be that as it may, as usual, Twitter had a field day ridiculing Rahul's 'trick sheet'.
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